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Living Well With Diabetes

Writings, discussions, and information about living with diabetes

Hello? Hello? Is This Thing On?

Whenever I write on Living Well With Diabetes, I wonder how many people are reading it? And who are they? Friends? Relatives? Complete strangers?

There a number of ways to find out the answer. My hosting provider has some basic reports by a program called Webalizer. These reports show that last week (February 14 through February 21), Living Well With Diabetes had 1516 page views. I’ve been a bit unhappy with those reports because provides only cumulative numbers of hits and page views on a daily, monthly and annually. Those cumulative numbers don’t differentiate between hits and page views by real people and those of automated web crawling programs such as Googlebot, Msnbot, and Yahoo! Slurp. I only care about the visits by real people because, well, I’m pretty sure none of the web crawlers have diabetes.

I finally got curious enough about my web site statistics that I installed a module on my web site to collect more detailed data. I did that about a month ago and I immediately noticed three things:

  1. The module still collects all the visit data from web crawlers and there are a huge number of web crawlers scanning my web site. So many that it’s difficult to find the stuff I’m really interesting in. That is, the visits from real people.
  2. The amount of data is large enough that it won’t be practical to collect it for very long.
  3. The collecting of the data seems to slow down the web site.

Because of this, just over a week ago, I signed up for Google Analytics. By the nature of how it collects its data, it automatically excludes the visits by web crawlers. It still collects a large amount of data, but because the data is stored on my Google Analytics account where I don’t have a storage space limit, it doesn’t take up space where it counts: on Living Well With Diabetes.

I’ve been collecting data with Google Analytics since February 14 — just over a week. So, after excluding all the visits by web crawlers, the number of page views by real people is…wait for it…129.

Yep, 129 page views spread across seven days and five postings. And 59 of those 129 page views weren’t even to new postings on the site; they were to my Quotes page. Clearly, if I want this blog to be more than just a fancy electronic letter home to Mom, I need to get the word out about Living Well With Diabetes. How does one go about promoting a blog? More on that later.

Bicycling Street Smarts

Most people can ride a bicycle. It’s one of those rituals most of us go though at an early age. We spend an afternoon, or a day, or a week with the assistance of a parent to learn how to balance and pedal to keep those wheels turning which, in turn, helps with the balance. I’m sure I’m oversimplifying this complicated miracle of learning, parental support, and stubbornness, but you get the idea. In any case, for many people. learning the basics of balance and pedaling and braking is about as far as they go in the area of bicycling as a “skill.”

But, bicycling safely should be a requirement too. And not just for people who do a lot of bicycling. According to the Alliance for Bicycling and Walking, relative to the number of miles traveled, bicyclists in the United States have a greater probability of being involved in a fatal accident (see their report here).

So, I was very pleased when a friend of mine forwarded a link to a web site dedicated to safe travel by bicycle. It’s been around in book form since about 1988, but it’s been kept up-to-date and customized for the needs and particular laws of a number of states. It has sold over 300,000 copies. Generously, they offer an online version here:

Bicycling Street Smarts: Riding Confidently, Legally and Safely

I’ve read through the chapters on riding safely in traffic since it’s something I do nearly every day. I was pleased to learn they supported my instinct that riding at the very far right edge of the pavement is not always the safest strategy. As my friend put it, their advice is “nuanced” for a wide variety of situations commonly encountered on the roads today.

If that “nuance” helps keep me out of the front grill of an SUV, I’m all for it.

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